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mutter-performance-source/src/core/stack-tracker.c

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/* -*- mode: C; c-file-style: "gnu"; indent-tabs-mode: nil; -*- */
/*
* SECTION:stack-tracker
* @short_description: Track stacking order for compositor
*
* #MetaStackTracker maintains the most accurate view we have at a
* given point of time of the ordering of the children of the root
* window (including override-redirect windows.) This is used to order
* the windows when the compositor draws them.
*
* By contrast, #MetaStack is responsible for keeping track of how we
* think that windows *should* be ordered. For windows we manage
* (non-override-redirect windows), the two stacking orders will be
* the same.
*/
/*
* Copyright (C) 2009 Red Hat, Inc.
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
* published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
* License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
* WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#include <config.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "frame.h"
#include "screen-private.h"
#include "stack-tracker.h"
#include <meta/util.h>
#include <meta/compositor.h>
/* The complexity here comes from resolving two competing factors:
*
* - We need to have a view of the stacking order that takes into
* account everything we have done without waiting for events
* back from the X server; we don't want to draw intermediate
* partially-stacked stack states just because we haven't received
* some notification yet.
*
* - Only the X server has an accurate view of the complete stacking;
* when we make a request to restack windows, we don't know how
* it will affect override-redirect windows, because at any point
* applications may restack these windows without our involvement.
*
* The technique we use is that we keep three sets of information:
*
* - The stacking order on the server as known from the last
* event we received.
* - A queue of stacking requests that *we* made subsequent to
* that last event.
* - A predicted stacking order, derived from applying the queued
* requests to the last state from the server.
*
* When we receive a new event: a) we compare the serial in the event to
* the serial of the queued requests and remove any that are now
* no longer pending b) if necessary, drop the predicted stacking
* order to recompute it at the next opportunity.
*
* Possible optimizations:
* Keep the stacks as an array + reverse-mapping hash table to avoid
* linear lookups.
* Keep the stacks as a GList + reverse-mapping hash table to avoid
* linear lookups and to make restacking constant-time.
*/
typedef union _MetaStackOp MetaStackOp;
typedef enum {
STACK_OP_ADD,
STACK_OP_REMOVE,
STACK_OP_RAISE_ABOVE,
STACK_OP_LOWER_BELOW
} MetaStackOpType;
/* MetaStackOp represents a "stacking operation" - a change to
* apply to a window stack. Depending on the context, it could
* either reflect a request we have sent to the server, or a
* notification event we received from the X server.
*/
union _MetaStackOp
{
struct {
MetaStackOpType type;
gulong serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
MetaStackWindow window;
} any;
struct {
MetaStackOpType type;
gulong serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
MetaStackWindow window;
} add;
struct {
MetaStackOpType type;
gulong serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
MetaStackWindow window;
} remove;
struct {
MetaStackOpType type;
gulong serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
MetaStackWindow window;
MetaStackWindow sibling;
} raise_above;
struct {
MetaStackOpType type;
gulong serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
MetaStackWindow window;
MetaStackWindow sibling;
} lower_below;
};
struct _MetaStackTracker
{
MetaScreen *screen;
/* This is the last state of the stack as based on events received
* from the X server.
*/
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
GArray *xserver_stack;
/* This is the serial of the last request we made that was reflected
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
* in xserver_stack
*/
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
gulong xserver_serial;
/* A combined stack containing X and Wayland windows but without
* any unverified operations applied. */
GArray *verified_stack;
/* This is a queue of requests we've made to change the stacking order,
* where we haven't yet gotten a reply back from the server.
*/
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
GQueue *unverified_predictions;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
/* This is how we think the stack is, based on verified_stack, and
* on the unverified_predictions we've made subsequent to
* verified_stack.
*/
GArray *predicted_stack;
/* Idle function used to sync the compositor's view of the window
* stack up with our best guess before a frame is drawn.
*/
guint sync_stack_later;
};
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
static gboolean
meta_stack_window_is_set (const MetaStackWindow *window)
{
if (window->any.type == META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11)
return window->x11.xwindow == None ? FALSE : TRUE;
else
return window->wayland.meta_window ? TRUE : FALSE;
}
gboolean
meta_stack_window_equal (const MetaStackWindow *a,
const MetaStackWindow *b)
{
if (a->any.type == b->any.type)
{
if (a->any.type == META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11)
return a->x11.xwindow == b->x11.xwindow;
else
return a->wayland.meta_window == b->wayland.meta_window;
}
else
return FALSE;
}
static char *
get_window_id (MetaStackWindow *window)
{
if (window->any.type == META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11)
return g_strdup_printf ("X11:%lx", window->x11.xwindow);
else
return g_strdup_printf ("Wayland:%p", window->wayland.meta_window);
}
static void
meta_stack_op_dump (MetaStackOp *op,
const char *prefix,
const char *suffix)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
char *window_id = get_window_id (&op->any.window);
switch (op->any.type)
{
case STACK_OP_ADD:
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "%sADD(%s; %ld)%s",
prefix, window_id, op->any.serial, suffix);
break;
case STACK_OP_REMOVE:
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "%sREMOVE(%s; %ld)%s",
prefix, window_id, op->any.serial, suffix);
break;
case STACK_OP_RAISE_ABOVE:
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
{
char *sibling_id = get_window_id (&op->raise_above.sibling);
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "%sRAISE_ABOVE(%s, %s; %ld)%s",
prefix,
window_id, sibling_id,
op->any.serial,
suffix);
g_free (sibling_id);
break;
}
case STACK_OP_LOWER_BELOW:
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
{
char *sibling_id = get_window_id (&op->lower_below.sibling);
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "%sLOWER_BELOW(%s, %s; %ld)%s",
prefix,
window_id, sibling_id,
op->any.serial,
suffix);
g_free (sibling_id);
break;
}
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
g_free (window_id);
}
static void
meta_stack_tracker_dump (MetaStackTracker *tracker)
{
guint i;
GList *l;
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "MetaStackTracker state (screen=%d)\n", tracker->screen->number);
meta_push_no_msg_prefix ();
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, " xserver_serial: %ld\n", tracker->xserver_serial);
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, " xserver_stack: ");
for (i = 0; i < tracker->xserver_stack->len; i++)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
MetaStackWindow *window = &g_array_index (tracker->xserver_stack, MetaStackWindow, i);
char *window_id = get_window_id (window);
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, " %s", window_id);
g_free (window_id);
}
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "\n verfied_stack: ");
for (i = 0; i < tracker->verified_stack->len; i++)
{
MetaStackWindow *window = &g_array_index (tracker->verified_stack, MetaStackWindow, i);
char *window_id = get_window_id (window);
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, " %s", window_id);
g_free (window_id);
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "\n unverified_predictions: [");
for (l = tracker->unverified_predictions->head; l; l = l->next)
{
MetaStackOp *op = l->data;
meta_stack_op_dump (op, "", l->next ? ", " : "");
}
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "]\n");
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
if (tracker->predicted_stack)
{
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "\n predicted_stack: ");
for (i = 0; i < tracker->predicted_stack->len; i++)
{
MetaStackWindow *window = &g_array_index (tracker->predicted_stack, MetaStackWindow, i);
char *window_id = get_window_id (window);
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, " %s", window_id);
g_free (window_id);
}
}
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "\n");
meta_pop_no_msg_prefix ();
}
static void
meta_stack_op_free (MetaStackOp *op)
{
g_slice_free (MetaStackOp, op);
}
static int
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
find_window (GArray *window_stack,
MetaStackWindow *window)
{
guint i;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
for (i = 0; i < window_stack->len; i++)
{
MetaStackWindow *current = &g_array_index (window_stack, MetaStackWindow, i);
if (current->any.type == window->any.type)
{
if (current->any.type == META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11 &&
current->x11.xwindow == window->x11.xwindow)
return i;
else
if (current->wayland.meta_window == window->wayland.meta_window)
return i;
}
}
return -1;
}
/* Returns TRUE if stack was changed */
static gboolean
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
move_window_above (GArray *stack,
MetaStackWindow *window,
int old_pos,
int above_pos)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
/* Copy the window by-value before we start shifting things around
* in the stack in case window points into the stack itself. */
MetaStackWindow window_val = *window;
int i;
if (old_pos < above_pos)
{
for (i = old_pos; i < above_pos; i++)
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
g_array_index (stack, MetaStackWindow, i) =
g_array_index (stack, MetaStackWindow, i + 1);
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
g_array_index (stack, MetaStackWindow, above_pos) = window_val;
return TRUE;
}
else if (old_pos > above_pos + 1)
{
for (i = old_pos; i > above_pos + 1; i--)
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
g_array_index (stack, MetaStackWindow, i) =
g_array_index (stack, MetaStackWindow, i - 1);
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
g_array_index (stack, MetaStackWindow, above_pos + 1) = window_val;
return TRUE;
}
else
return FALSE;
}
/* Returns TRUE if stack was changed */
static gboolean
meta_stack_op_apply (MetaStackOp *op,
GArray *stack)
{
switch (op->any.type)
{
case STACK_OP_ADD:
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
int old_pos = find_window (stack, &op->add.window);
if (old_pos >= 0)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
char *window_id = get_window_id (&op->add.window);
g_warning ("STACK_OP_ADD: window %s already in stack",
window_id);
g_free (window_id);
return FALSE;
}
g_array_append_val (stack, op->add.window);
return TRUE;
}
case STACK_OP_REMOVE:
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
int old_pos = find_window (stack, &op->remove.window);
if (old_pos < 0)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
char *window_id = get_window_id (&op->remove.window);
g_warning ("STACK_OP_REMOVE: window %s not in stack",
window_id);
g_free (window_id);
return FALSE;
}
g_array_remove_index (stack, old_pos);
return TRUE;
}
case STACK_OP_RAISE_ABOVE:
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
int old_pos = find_window (stack, &op->raise_above.window);
int above_pos;
if (old_pos < 0)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
char *window_id = get_window_id (&op->raise_above.window);
g_warning ("STACK_OP_RAISE_ABOVE: window %s not in stack",
window_id);
g_free (window_id);
return FALSE;
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
if (meta_stack_window_is_set (&op->raise_above.sibling))
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
above_pos = find_window (stack, &op->raise_above.sibling);
if (above_pos < 0)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
char *sibling_id = get_window_id (&op->raise_above.sibling);
g_warning ("STACK_OP_RAISE_ABOVE: sibling window %s not in stack",
sibling_id);
g_free (sibling_id);
return FALSE;
}
}
else
{
above_pos = -1;
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
return move_window_above (stack, &op->raise_above.window, old_pos, above_pos);
}
case STACK_OP_LOWER_BELOW:
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
int old_pos = find_window (stack, &op->lower_below.window);
int above_pos;
if (old_pos < 0)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
char *window_id = get_window_id (&op->lower_below.window);
g_warning ("STACK_OP_LOWER_BELOW: window %s not in stack",
window_id);
g_free (window_id);
return FALSE;
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
if (meta_stack_window_is_set (&op->lower_below.sibling))
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
int below_pos = find_window (stack, &op->lower_below.sibling);
if (below_pos < 0)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
char *sibling_id = get_window_id (&op->lower_below.sibling);
g_warning ("STACK_OP_LOWER_BELOW: sibling window %s not in stack",
sibling_id);
g_free (sibling_id);
return FALSE;
}
above_pos = below_pos - 1;
}
else
{
above_pos = stack->len - 1;
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
return move_window_above (stack, &op->lower_below.window, old_pos, above_pos);
}
}
g_assert_not_reached ();
return FALSE;
}
static GArray *
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
copy_stack (GArray *stack)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
GArray *copy = g_array_sized_new (FALSE, FALSE, sizeof (MetaStackWindow), stack->len);
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
g_array_set_size (copy, stack->len);
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
memcpy (copy->data, stack->data, sizeof (MetaStackWindow) * stack->len);
return copy;
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
static void
requery_xserver_stack (MetaStackTracker *tracker)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
MetaScreen *screen = tracker->screen;
Window ignored1, ignored2;
Window *children;
guint n_children;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
guint i;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
if (tracker->xserver_stack)
g_array_free (tracker->xserver_stack, TRUE);
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
tracker->xserver_serial = XNextRequest (screen->display->xdisplay);
XQueryTree (screen->display->xdisplay,
screen->xroot,
&ignored1, &ignored2, &children, &n_children);
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
tracker->xserver_stack =
g_array_sized_new (FALSE, FALSE, sizeof (MetaStackWindow), n_children);
g_array_set_size (tracker->xserver_stack, n_children);
for (i = 0; i < n_children; i++)
{
MetaStackWindow *window =
&g_array_index (tracker->xserver_stack, MetaStackWindow, i);
window->any.type = META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11;
window->x11.xwindow = children[i];
}
XFree (children);
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
}
MetaStackTracker *
meta_stack_tracker_new (MetaScreen *screen)
{
MetaStackTracker *tracker;
tracker = g_new0 (MetaStackTracker, 1);
tracker->screen = screen;
requery_xserver_stack (tracker);
tracker->verified_stack = copy_stack (tracker->xserver_stack);
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
tracker->unverified_predictions = g_queue_new ();
meta_stack_tracker_dump (tracker);
return tracker;
}
void
meta_stack_tracker_free (MetaStackTracker *tracker)
{
if (tracker->sync_stack_later)
meta_later_remove (tracker->sync_stack_later);
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
g_array_free (tracker->xserver_stack, TRUE);
g_array_free (tracker->verified_stack, TRUE);
if (tracker->predicted_stack)
g_array_free (tracker->predicted_stack, TRUE);
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
g_queue_foreach (tracker->unverified_predictions, (GFunc)meta_stack_op_free, NULL);
g_queue_free (tracker->unverified_predictions);
tracker->unverified_predictions = NULL;
g_free (tracker);
}
static void
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
stack_tracker_apply_prediction (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
MetaStackOp *op)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
/* If this is a wayland operation then it's implicitly verified so
* we can apply it immediately so long as it doesn't depend on any
* unverified X operations...
*/
if (op->any.window.any.type == META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_WAYLAND &&
tracker->unverified_predictions->length == 0)
{
if (meta_stack_op_apply (op, tracker->verified_stack))
meta_stack_tracker_queue_sync_stack (tracker);
}
else
{
meta_stack_op_dump (op, "Predicting: ", "\n");
g_queue_push_tail (tracker->unverified_predictions, op);
}
if (!tracker->predicted_stack ||
meta_stack_op_apply (op, tracker->predicted_stack))
meta_stack_tracker_queue_sync_stack (tracker);
meta_stack_tracker_dump (tracker);
}
void
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
meta_stack_tracker_record_add (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
const MetaStackWindow *window,
gulong serial)
{
MetaStackOp *op = g_slice_new (MetaStackOp);
op->any.type = STACK_OP_ADD;
op->any.serial = serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
op->any.window = *window;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
stack_tracker_apply_prediction (tracker, op);
}
void
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
meta_stack_tracker_record_remove (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
const MetaStackWindow *window,
gulong serial)
{
MetaStackOp *op = g_slice_new (MetaStackOp);
op->any.type = STACK_OP_REMOVE;
op->any.serial = serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
op->any.window = *window;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
stack_tracker_apply_prediction (tracker, op);
}
void
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
meta_stack_tracker_record_restack_windows (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
const MetaStackWindow *windows,
int n_windows,
gulong serial)
{
int i;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
int n_x_windows = 0;
/* XRestackWindows() isn't actually a X requests - it's broken down
* by XLib into a series of XConfigureWindow(StackMode=below); we
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
* mirror that here.
*
* Since there may be a mixture of X and wayland windows in the
* stack it's ambiguous which operations we should associate with an
* X serial number. One thing we do know though is that there will
* be (n_x_window - 1) X requests made.
*
* Aside: Having a separate StackOp for this would be possible to
* get some extra efficiency in memory allocation and in applying
* the op, at the expense of a code complexity. Implementation hint
* for that - keep op->restack_window.n_complete, and when receiving
* events with intermediate serials, set n_complete rather than
* removing the op from the queue.
*/
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
if (n_windows && windows[0].any.type == META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11)
n_x_windows++;
for (i = 0; i < n_windows - 1; i++)
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
{
const MetaStackWindow *lower = &windows[i + 1];
gboolean involves_x = FALSE;
if (lower->any.type == META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11)
{
n_x_windows++;
/* Since the first X window is a reference point we only
* assoicate a serial number with the operations involving
* later X windows. */
if (n_x_windows > 1)
involves_x = TRUE;
}
meta_stack_tracker_record_lower_below (tracker, lower, &windows[i],
involves_x ? serial++ : 0);
}
}
void
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
meta_stack_tracker_record_raise_above (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
const MetaStackWindow *window,
const MetaStackWindow *sibling,
gulong serial)
{
MetaStackOp *op = g_slice_new (MetaStackOp);
op->any.type = STACK_OP_RAISE_ABOVE;
op->any.serial = serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
op->any.window = *window;
if (sibling)
op->raise_above.sibling = *sibling;
else
{
op->raise_above.sibling.any.type = META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11;
op->raise_above.sibling.x11.xwindow = None;
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
stack_tracker_apply_prediction (tracker, op);
}
void
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
meta_stack_tracker_record_lower_below (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
const MetaStackWindow *window,
const MetaStackWindow *sibling,
gulong serial)
{
MetaStackOp *op = g_slice_new (MetaStackOp);
op->any.type = STACK_OP_LOWER_BELOW;
op->any.serial = serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
op->any.window = *window;
if (sibling)
op->lower_below.sibling = *sibling;
else
{
op->lower_below.sibling.any.type = META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11;
op->lower_below.sibling.x11.xwindow = None;
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
stack_tracker_apply_prediction (tracker, op);
}
void
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
meta_stack_tracker_record_lower (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
const MetaStackWindow *window,
gulong serial)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
meta_stack_tracker_record_raise_above (tracker, window, NULL, serial);
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
/* @op is an operation derived from an X event from the server and we
* want to verify that our predicted operations are consistent with
* what's being reported by the X server.
*
* NB: Since our stack may actually be a mixture of X and Wayland
* clients we can't simply apply these operations derived from X
* events onto our stack and discard old predictions because these
* operations aren't aware of wayland windows.
*
* This function applies all the unverified predicted operations up to
* the given @serial onto the verified_stack so that we can check the
* stack for consistency with the given X operation.
*
* Return value: %TRUE if the predicted state is consistent with
* receiving the given @op from X, else %FALSE.
*
* @modified will be set to %TRUE if tracker->verified_stack is
* changed by applying any newly validated operations, else %FALSE.
*/
static gboolean
stack_tracker_verify_predictions (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
MetaStackOp *op,
gboolean *modified)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
GArray *tmp_predicted_stack = NULL;
GArray *predicted_stack;
gboolean modified_stack = FALSE;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
/* Wayland operations don't need to be verified and shouldn't end up
* passed to this api. */
g_return_val_if_fail (op->any.window.any.type == META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11, FALSE);
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
if (tracker->unverified_predictions->length)
{
GList *l;
tmp_predicted_stack = predicted_stack = copy_stack (tracker->verified_stack);
for (l = tracker->unverified_predictions->head; l; l = l->next)
{
MetaStackOp *current_op = l->data;
if (current_op->any.serial > op->any.serial)
break;
modified_stack |= meta_stack_op_apply (current_op, predicted_stack);
}
}
else
predicted_stack = tracker->verified_stack;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
switch (op->any.type)
{
case STACK_OP_ADD:
if (!find_window (predicted_stack, &op->any.window))
{
char *window_id = get_window_id (&op->any.window);
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "Verify STACK_OP_ADD: window %s not found\n",
window_id);
g_free (window_id);
goto not_verified;
}
break;
case STACK_OP_REMOVE:
if (find_window (predicted_stack, &op->any.window))
{
char *window_id = get_window_id (&op->any.window);
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "Verify STACK_OP_REMOVE: window %s was unexpectedly found\n",
window_id);
g_free (window_id);
goto not_verified;
}
break;
case STACK_OP_RAISE_ABOVE:
{
Window last_xwindow = None;
char *window_id;
unsigned int i;
/* This code is only intended for verifying operations based
* on XEvents where we can assume the sibling refers to
* another X window... */
g_return_val_if_fail (op->raise_above.sibling.any.type ==
META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11, FALSE);
for (i = 0; i < predicted_stack->len; i++)
{
MetaStackWindow *window = &g_array_index (predicted_stack, MetaStackWindow, i);
if (meta_stack_window_equal (window, &op->any.window))
{
if (last_xwindow == op->raise_above.sibling.x11.xwindow)
goto verified;
else
goto not_verified;
}
if (window->any.type == META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11)
last_xwindow = window->x11.xwindow;
}
window_id = get_window_id (&op->any.window);
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "Verify STACK_OP_RAISE_ABOVE: window %s not found\n",
window_id);
g_free (window_id);
goto not_verified;
}
case STACK_OP_LOWER_BELOW:
g_warn_if_reached (); /* No X events currently lead to this path */
goto not_verified;
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
verified:
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
/* We can free the operations which we have now verified... */
while (tracker->unverified_predictions->head)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
MetaStackOp *queued_op = tracker->unverified_predictions->head->data;
if (queued_op->any.serial > op->any.serial)
break;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
g_queue_pop_head (tracker->unverified_predictions);
meta_stack_op_free (queued_op);
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
*modified = modified_stack;
if (modified_stack)
{
g_array_free (tracker->verified_stack, TRUE);
tracker->verified_stack = predicted_stack;
}
else if (tmp_predicted_stack)
g_array_free (tmp_predicted_stack, TRUE);
return TRUE;
not_verified:
if (tmp_predicted_stack)
g_array_free (tmp_predicted_stack, TRUE);
if (tracker->predicted_stack)
{
g_array_free (tracker->predicted_stack, TRUE);
tracker->predicted_stack = NULL;
}
*modified = FALSE;
return FALSE;
}
/* If we find that our predicted state is not consistent with what the
* X server is reporting to us then this function can re-query and
* re-synchronize verified_stack with the X server stack while
* hopefully not disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows.
*
* Return value: %TRUE if the verified stack was modified with respect
* to the predicted stack else %FALSE.
*
* Note: ->predicted_stack will be cleared by this function if
* ->verified_stack had to be modified when re-synchronizing.
*/
static gboolean
resync_verified_stack_with_xserver_stack (MetaStackTracker *tracker)
{
GList *l;
unsigned int i, j;
MetaStackWindow *expected_xwindow;
gboolean modified_stack = FALSE;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
/* Overview of the algorithm:
*
* - Re-query the complete X window stack from the X server via
* XQueryTree() and update xserver_stack.
*
* - Apply all operations in unverified_predictions to
* verified_stack so we have a predicted stack including Wayland
* windows and free the queue of unverified_predictions.
*
* - Iterate through the x windows listed in verified_stack at the
* same time as iterating the windows in xserver_list. (Stop
* when we reach the end of the xserver_list)
* - If the window found doesn't match the window expected
* according to the order of xserver_list then:
* - Look ahead for the window we were expecting and restack
* that above the previous X window. If we fail to find the
* expected window then create a new entry for it and stack
* that.
*
* - Continue to iterate through verified_stack for any remaining
* X windows that we now know aren't in the xserver_list and
* remove them.
*
* - Free ->predicted_stack if any.
*/
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "Fully re-synchronizing X stack with verified stack\n");
requery_xserver_stack (tracker);
for (l = tracker->unverified_predictions->head; l; l = l->next)
meta_stack_op_apply (l->data, tracker->verified_stack);
g_queue_clear (tracker->unverified_predictions);
j = 0;
expected_xwindow =
&g_array_index (tracker->xserver_stack, MetaStackWindow, j);
for (i = 0;
i < tracker->verified_stack->len;
)
{
MetaStackWindow *current =
&g_array_index (tracker->verified_stack, MetaStackWindow, i);
if (current->any.type != META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11)
{
/* Progress i but not j */
i++;
continue;
}
if (current->x11.xwindow != expected_xwindow->x11.xwindow)
{
MetaStackWindow new;
MetaStackWindow *expected;
int expected_index;
/* If the current window corresponds to a window that's not
* in xserver_stack any more then the least disruptive thing
* we can do is to simply remove it and take another look at
* the same index.
*
* Note: we didn't used to do this and instead relied on
* removed windows getting pushed to the end of the list so
* they could all be removed together but this also resulted
* in pushing Wayland windows to the end too, disrupting
* their positioning relative to X windows too much.
*
* Technically we only need to look forward from j if we
* wanted to optimize this a bit...
*/
if (find_window (tracker->xserver_stack, current) < 0)
{
g_array_remove_index (tracker->verified_stack, i);
continue;
}
/* Technically we only need to look forward from i if we
* wanted to optimize this a bit... */
expected_index =
find_window (tracker->verified_stack, expected_xwindow);
if (expected_index >= 0)
{
expected = &g_array_index (tracker->verified_stack,
MetaStackWindow, expected_index);
}
else
{
new.any.type = META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11;
new.x11.xwindow = expected_xwindow->x11.xwindow;
g_array_append_val (tracker->verified_stack, new);
expected = &new;
expected_index = tracker->verified_stack->len - 1;
}
/* Note: that this move will effectively bump the index of
* the current window.
*
* We want to continue by re-checking this window against
* the next expected window though so we don't have to
* update i to compensate here.
*/
move_window_above (tracker->verified_stack, expected,
expected_index, /* current index */
i - 1); /* above */
modified_stack = TRUE;
}
/* NB: we want to make sure that if we break the loop because j
* reaches the end of xserver_stack that i has also been
* incremented already so that we can run a final loop to remove
* remaining windows based on the i index. */
i++;
j++;
expected_xwindow =
&g_array_index (tracker->xserver_stack, MetaStackWindow, j);
if (j >= tracker->xserver_stack->len)
break;
}
/* We now know that any remaining X windows aren't listed in the
* xserver_stack and so we can remove them. */
while (i < tracker->verified_stack->len)
{
MetaStackWindow *current =
&g_array_index (tracker->verified_stack, MetaStackWindow, i);
if (current->any.type == META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11)
g_array_remove_index (tracker->verified_stack, i);
else
i++;
modified_stack = TRUE;
}
/* If we get to the end of verified_list and there are any remaining
* entries in xserver_list then append them all to the end */
for (; j < tracker->xserver_stack->len; j++)
{
MetaStackWindow *current =
&g_array_index (tracker->xserver_stack, MetaStackWindow, j);
g_array_append_val (tracker->verified_stack, *current);
modified_stack = TRUE;
}
if (modified_stack)
{
if (tracker->predicted_stack)
{
g_array_free (tracker->predicted_stack, TRUE);
tracker->predicted_stack = NULL;
}
meta_stack_tracker_queue_sync_stack (tracker);
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
return modified_stack;
}
static void
stack_tracker_event_received (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
MetaStackOp *op)
{
gboolean need_sync = FALSE;
gboolean verified;
meta_stack_op_dump (op, "Stack op event received: ", "\n");
if (op->any.serial < tracker->xserver_serial)
{
/* g_warning ("Spurious X event received affecting stack; doing full re-query"); */
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
resync_verified_stack_with_xserver_stack (tracker);
meta_stack_tracker_dump (tracker);
return;
}
tracker->xserver_serial = op->any.serial;
/* XXX: With the design we have ended up with it looks like we've
* ended up making it unnecessary to maintain tracker->xserver_stack
* since we only need an xserver_stack during the
* resync_verified_stack_with_xserver_stack() at which point we are
* going to query the full stack from the X server using
* XQueryTree() anyway.
*
* TODO: remove tracker->xserver_stack.
*/
meta_stack_op_apply (op, tracker->xserver_stack);
verified = stack_tracker_verify_predictions (tracker, op, &need_sync);
if (!verified)
{
resync_verified_stack_with_xserver_stack (tracker);
meta_stack_tracker_dump (tracker);
return;
}
meta_stack_tracker_dump (tracker);
}
void
meta_stack_tracker_create_event (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
XCreateWindowEvent *event)
{
MetaStackOp op;
op.any.type = STACK_OP_ADD;
op.any.serial = event->serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
op.add.window.any.type = META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11;
op.add.window.x11.xwindow = event->window;
stack_tracker_event_received (tracker, &op);
}
void
meta_stack_tracker_destroy_event (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
XDestroyWindowEvent *event)
{
MetaStackOp op;
op.any.type = STACK_OP_REMOVE;
op.any.serial = event->serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
op.remove.window.any.type = META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11;
op.remove.window.x11.xwindow = event->window;
stack_tracker_event_received (tracker, &op);
}
void
meta_stack_tracker_reparent_event (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
XReparentEvent *event)
{
if (event->parent == event->event)
{
MetaStackOp op;
op.any.type = STACK_OP_ADD;
op.any.serial = event->serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
op.add.window.any.type = META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11;
op.add.window.x11.xwindow = event->window;
stack_tracker_event_received (tracker, &op);
}
else
{
MetaStackOp op;
op.any.type = STACK_OP_REMOVE;
op.any.serial = event->serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
op.remove.window.any.type = META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11;
op.remove.window.x11.xwindow = event->window;
stack_tracker_event_received (tracker, &op);
}
}
void
meta_stack_tracker_configure_event (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
XConfigureEvent *event)
{
MetaStackOp op;
op.any.type = STACK_OP_RAISE_ABOVE;
op.any.serial = event->serial;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
op.raise_above.window.any.type = META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11;
op.raise_above.window.x11.xwindow = event->window;
op.raise_above.sibling.any.type = META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11;
op.raise_above.sibling.x11.xwindow = event->above;
stack_tracker_event_received (tracker, &op);
}
/**
* meta_stack_tracker_get_stack:
* @tracker: a #MetaStackTracker
* @windows: location to store list of windows, or %NULL
* @n_windows: location to store count of windows, or %NULL
*
* @windows will contain the most current view we have of the stacking order
* of the children of the root window. The returned array contains
* everything: InputOnly windows, override-redirect windows,
* hidden windows, etc. Some of these will correspond to MetaWindow
* objects, others won't.
*
* Assuming that no other clients have made requests that change
* the stacking order since we last received a notification, the
* returned list of windows is exactly that you'd get as the
* children when calling XQueryTree() on the root window.
*/
void
meta_stack_tracker_get_stack (MetaStackTracker *tracker,
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
MetaStackWindow **windows,
int *n_windows)
{
GArray *stack;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
if (tracker->unverified_predictions->length == 0)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
stack = tracker->verified_stack;
}
else
{
if (tracker->predicted_stack == NULL)
{
GList *l;
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
tracker->predicted_stack = copy_stack (tracker->verified_stack);
for (l = tracker->unverified_predictions->head; l; l = l->next)
{
MetaStackOp *op = l->data;
meta_stack_op_apply (op, tracker->predicted_stack);
}
}
stack = tracker->predicted_stack;
}
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
meta_topic (META_DEBUG_STACK, "Get Stack\n");
meta_stack_tracker_dump (tracker);
if (windows)
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
*windows = (MetaStackWindow *)stack->data;
if (n_windows)
*n_windows = stack->len;
}
/**
* meta_stack_tracker_sync_stack:
* @tracker: a #MetaStackTracker
*
* Informs the compositor of the current stacking order of windows,
* based on the predicted view maintained by the #MetaStackTracker.
*/
void
meta_stack_tracker_sync_stack (MetaStackTracker *tracker)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
MetaStackWindow *windows;
GList *meta_windows;
int n_windows;
int i;
if (tracker->sync_stack_later)
{
meta_later_remove (tracker->sync_stack_later);
tracker->sync_stack_later = 0;
}
meta_stack_tracker_get_stack (tracker, &windows, &n_windows);
meta_windows = NULL;
for (i = 0; i < n_windows; i++)
{
Add support for stacking X and Wayland windows together This breaks down the assumptions in stack-tracker.c and stack.c that Mutter is only stacking X windows. The stack tracker now tracks windows using a MetaStackWindow structure which is a union with a type member so that X windows can be distinguished from Wayland windows. Some notable changes are: Queued stack tracker operations that affect Wayland windows will not be associated with an X serial number. If an operation only affects a Wayland window and there are no queued stack tracker operations ("unvalidated predictions") then the operation is applied immediately since there is no server involved with changing the stacking for Wayland windows. The stack tracker can no longer respond to X events by turning them into stack operations and discarding the predicted operations made prior to that event because operations based on X events don't know anything about the stacking of Wayland windows. Instead of discarding old predictions the new approach is to trust the predictions but whenever we receive an event from the server that affects stacking we cross-reference with the predicted stack and check for consistency. So e.g. if we have an event that says ADD window A then we apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify the predicted state includes a window A. Similarly if an event says RAISE_ABOVE(B, C) we can apply the predictions (up to the serial for that event) and verify that window B is above C. If we ever receive spurious stacking events (with a serial older than we would expect) or find an inconsistency (some things aren't possible to predict from the compositor) then we hit a re-synchronization code-path that will query the X server for the full stacking order and then use that stack to walk through our combined stack and force the X windows to match the just queried stack but avoiding disrupting the relative stacking of Wayland windows. This will be relatively expensive but shouldn't be hit for compositor initiated restacking operations where our predictions should be accurate. The code in core/stack.c that deals with synchronizing the window stack with the X server had to be updated quite heavily. In general the patch avoids changing the fundamental approach being used but most of the code did need some amount of re-factoring to consider what re-stacking operations actually involve X or not and when we need to restack X windows we sometimes need to search for a suitable X sibling to restack relative too since the closest siblings may be Wayland windows.
2012-04-05 10:22:13 +00:00
MetaStackWindow *window = &windows[i];
if (window->any.type == META_WINDOW_CLIENT_TYPE_X11)
{
MetaWindow *meta_window =
meta_display_lookup_x_window (tracker->screen->display, windows[i].x11.xwindow);
/* When mapping back from xwindow to MetaWindow we have to be a bit careful;
* children of the root could include unmapped windows created by toolkits
* for internal purposes, including ones that we have registered in our
* XID => window table. (Wine uses a toplevel for _NET_WM_USER_TIME_WINDOW;
* see window-prop.c:reload_net_wm_user_time_window() for registration.)
*/
if (meta_window &&
(windows[i].x11.xwindow == meta_window->xwindow ||
(meta_window->frame && windows[i].x11.xwindow == meta_window->frame->xwindow)))
meta_windows = g_list_prepend (meta_windows, meta_window);
}
else
meta_windows = g_list_prepend (meta_windows, window->wayland.meta_window);
}
meta_compositor_sync_stack (tracker->screen->display->compositor,
meta_windows);
g_list_free (meta_windows);
meta_screen_restacked (tracker->screen);
}
static gboolean
stack_tracker_sync_stack_later (gpointer data)
{
meta_stack_tracker_sync_stack (data);
return FALSE;
}
/**
* meta_stack_tracker_queue_sync_stack:
* @tracker: a #MetaStackTracker
*
* Queue informing the compositor of the new stacking order before the
* next redraw. (See meta_stack_tracker_sync_stack()). This is called
* internally when the stack of X windows changes, but also needs be
* called directly when we an undecorated window is first shown or
* withdrawn since the compositor's stacking order (which contains only
* the windows that have a corresponding MetaWindow) will change without
* any change to the stacking order of the X windows, if we are creating
* or destroying MetaWindows.
*/
void
meta_stack_tracker_queue_sync_stack (MetaStackTracker *tracker)
{
if (tracker->sync_stack_later == 0)
{
tracker->sync_stack_later = meta_later_add (META_LATER_SYNC_STACK,
stack_tracker_sync_stack_later,
tracker, NULL);
}
}